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4. Respect everyone's pronouns.
(mine are moron and idiot).
>64
Itβs weird being the same age as old people. Live every day like it is your last; one day, it will be.
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...the advertisement CORRECTLY states that "it is raining in Seattle...."
such advertisement is traditional (wink wink ) means of discouraging influx...
without being rude
it sort of works...I still have web feet
Since I am from Missouri ...
show me a NORMAL person who does NOT go to work PRIMARILY to stay alive
all other comes with territory - "loving" the boring job being at the bottom...
I believe some educated philosopher stated that, and since I am an OF,
I forgot the name...
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jana_hus wrote: show me a NORMAL person who does NOT go to work PRIMARILY to stay alive
Yes, I definitely fit into that category.
But, if you only work to survive, you are probably living very little.
Of course, there are many ways to look at work:
1 - Work to get money so you can do what you want.
2 - Work at things you like to do but don't pay as much but lets you "work" at what you like to do.
3 - Sit around and live off other people's work.
4 - Any kind of grift -- unfortunately it still takes some "work" though.
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Since he works at OnlyFans as a dude, I guess I understand his trepidation.
Jeremy Falcon
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jana_hus wrote: show me a NORMAL person who does NOT go to work PRIMARILY to stay alive Humans need to do something with their time. Even if it's just playing video games all day. We have to do something to escape boredom. Extending that concept to help others as well as ourselves is all work is. There's no need to hate it. Perhaps you don't like the hours, ok... get it. Perhaps you don't like the industry... get it. So find something you like to do can kill two birds with one STONE.
jana_hus wrote: all other comes with territory - "loving" the boring job being at the bottom... As long as you have that attitude you'll always be at the bottom. I've hired and managed people, and I promise nobody wants to be around Mr. Poopy. You get a lot of good things from work, you're learning skills and hopefully make friends. Sure, not every day will be great, but I'll just say there are some peeps I've met through work that I'm so grateful for getting the chance to know.
Jeremy Falcon
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I agree.
Honesty and sincerity are often the best approaches in dealing with people (or least some good ones).
Tactfulness is also a good thing especially in business.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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The truth is, how you say something and present your aura is 1,000 times more powerful than what you say.
For sure...than you get raked over the coal when your presentation "aura" does not jive with expectations.
In my world it is called prejudice judgement. Unfortunately not limited to presentation.
And you are also correct that some humans do that from boredom.
As an OF, I prefer
"if you cannot say anything nice - just shut up"
So with toastmasters "sandwich " approach :
irregardless of all of this , have a swell day and enjoy life as it comes.
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jana_hus wrote: For sure...than you get raked over the coal when your presentation "aura" does not jive with expectations. Seems to me like deep down you want to be positive, but your posts still have a lot of deep rooted negativity man.
If you give a presentation and it bombs, but you're a good, genuine person... 100% of people will understand. If you bomb it and tell them all to kiss your arse, well that's a different story.
I dunno where all these negative thoughts are coming from, but you may wanna go be honest with a winner and tell them you're trying to retrain your mind. Losers aren't gonna help.
Jeremy Falcon
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raddevus wrote: try to give them a sense of wonder and amazement at how you do things.Try to amaze others
Maybe I'm reading this wrongly but isn't that the very definition of a showoff?
I'm fine with the other two points but this one, I would replace with "Be open with others. Explain your reasoning but be willing to accept theirs".
Mircea
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Mircea Neacsu wrote: Maybe I'm reading this wrongly but isn't that the very definition of a showoff?
Yep, you're reading it wrongly.
A show-off would be a person who "wants to prove only s/he can do the thing".
This is more about being so excited & interested in the subject that when you do things you experience a "sense of wonder" and are excited to share with others.
Think of the experience of a science show where the "teacher" fills a balloon with hydrogen then ignites it. Not a show-off but enjoying the experience of others experiencing the science.
Of course you have to be open to accept others input. The point of the book is that everyone is exciting about what they're learning, not _who_ learned it first.
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Wordle 1,142 4/6*
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Wordle 1,142 4/6*
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"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Wordle 1,142 4/6
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Ok, I have had my coffee, so you can all come out now!
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Wordle 1,142 6/6
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Jeremy Falcon
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Wordle 1,142 4/6
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"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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I find myself with the itch to learn a new system programming language. I really, really wanted to like Rust because I think the idea of compile time memory checks is great. And you don't want to become a dinosaur where tech passes you by. But, it's too opinionated... with crap that doesn't even matter. Like good luck changing the src directory to app to discourage too many acronyms being used (I consider app shorthand and not an acronym). Rust be like... nope you too st00pid for dat.
Now, C will always be my favorite language, despite the fact I rarely use it these days and spend my time in TypeScript. For all the C haters out there... look inward. People that hate C are usually young kids who never used it. Moving on is one thing, but hatred is another. IMO it's not that hard to understand safe memory management. All the hoopla about C sucking is just that... hoopla. Unfortunately, I understand that most programmers never really take the time to learn crap, so I do get the need to rethink things to prevent overflows.
Anyway, so I heard about Zig. Being a C fanboi and its two-way interoperability with it, I was immediately like... noice. Can't say I'm crazy about the name, but at least I can change my src directory to app . It doesn't have a borrow checker like Rust, but it does have a way to at least help track down memory issues which is pretty clever. There's no global memory allocator at all. And it has a pretty nifty compile time build system that's like C++'s templating on steroids. It doesn't have nearly the tooling as Rust, but then again neither does C. But, it can use any C library, so you don't have to do everything from scratch at least.
Anyone try it? Like it? Don't like it? Has cooties?
Jeremy Falcon
modified 3-Aug-24 15:44pm.
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I'd never heard of Zig, but your description makes it sound appealing for C fans.
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Yeah. Much like C, you don't have stuff like regex out of the box. But, nothing stopping you from using the PCRE C library or a Zig regex library. So, I'm sure it wouldn't appeal to everyone. For those of us to still love C but want something a bit newer (like a better type system)... it's sounding cool. It does bake in unit testing though, which while you can do in C... it's not really baked in.
Jeremy Falcon
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The thing with C is it's universal, it runs on dang near any machine.
I started to learn Rust but got bogged down because it doesn't/wouldn't compile for embedded systems. (Without a lot of foul language involved)
If I do Desktop or Web stuff I use C# and associated tools.
A home without books is a body without soul. Marcus Tullius Cicero
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.4.0 (Many new features) JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: EventAggregator
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Mike Hankey wrote: The thing with C is it's universal, it runs on dang near any machine. Currently, Zig uses LLVM to produce object code. The same as Rust and clang. Zig has its own linker though. There have been talks about replacing LLVM usage in Zig down the road, but suffice it to say, the very nature of LLVM executable is to also be universal. It actually takes it even one step further and allows you to easily cross-compile, which isn't so easy to do in C.
Keep in mind, it's a system language. Which is to say, like C, there's no runtime that runs along aside it with a garbage collector, etc. So, as long as there's a binary and instruction compatibility (which LLVM handles) then the universality of it will depend on the programmer making system calls, etc. And LLVM supports all the major formats: COFF, ELF, etc. and instruction sets.
Now, can I guarantee there's not some esoteric compatibility out that LLVM doesn't cover? Nope. I'm sure there a few chips it doesn't support. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't use a language. It'll cover 99.9% of the use cases. If you're the one out of a million that needs to support some chip nobody ever heard of, use C. But, if you want something a bit more modern, but without acting "rusty" like Rust there are options.
Mike Hankey wrote: I started to learn Rust but got bogged down because it doesn't/wouldn't compile for embedded systems. IMO Rust took a great concept and over complicated it, which I could look past because the complication also comes with benefits. But, combine that with being too opinionated and the ecosystem being littered with childish zealots... let's just say I deal with enough of that from JavaScript/TypeScript.
Mike Hankey wrote: If I do Desktop or Web stuff I use C# and associated tools. For me, it's Node for web dev and will be for the foreseeable future. Butttt... for lower level stuff me looky looky.
Jeremy Falcon
modified 3-Aug-24 18:52pm.
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I may have to look at it then, had no idea it could link to ELF.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: And LLVM supports all the major formats: COFF, ELF, etc. and instruction sets.
Thanks for the heads up.
A home without books is a body without soul. Marcus Tullius Cicero
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.4.0 (Many new features) JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: EventAggregator
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Any time man. And I get it; I'll never fully replace C in my heart. It's literally the backbone of the world we live in.
Jeremy Falcon
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Turns out Visual Code has a ZIG language extension. How cool is that?
A home without books is a body without soul. Marcus Tullius Cicero
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.4.0 (Many new features) JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: EventAggregator
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